Commonwealth v. Kohan

122 A.2d 808, 385 Pa. 264, 1956 Pa. LEXIS 463
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 21, 1956
DocketAppeal, 97
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 122 A.2d 808 (Commonwealth v. Kohan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Kohan, 122 A.2d 808, 385 Pa. 264, 1956 Pa. LEXIS 463 (Pa. 1956).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Musmanno,

On May 10, 1955, while driving his car on Hardy’s Road in Hampton Township at a speed which ignored the hazardous conditions of the highway — a light rain was falling, the roadway was wet, winding and slippery —Joseph A. Kohan, 17 years of age, not unnaturally attracted the attention of a State trooper fortuitously on the scene. The officer pursued him an unnamed distance and finally apprehended him on a certain Wild-wood Road. A month later the youthful motorist was taken before a Justice of the Peace who fined him $10.00 and imposed costs in the sum of $3.50.

On August 3, 1955, the Bureau of Highway Safety, Department of Revenue, notified Joseph to appear on August 19, 1955, for a hearing on the subject of motor vehicle violation. The notice ended with the paragraph: “The Vehicle Code provides that operating privileges may be suspended for failure to appear for a hearing.”

Joseph did not attend the hearing and on October 18,1955, the Secretary of Revenue, under the authority of Section 615(b) of The Vehicle Code of 1929, as amended, 75 PS §192 (b), suspended his driving privileges indefinitely. Joseph then petitioned the County Court of Allegheny for an appeal from the action of the *266 Secretary of Revenue, asserting that since he had paid his fine and the costs of prosecution and there had been no accident, he did not believe that there had existed any legal necessity for him to appear at the hearing.

On January 9,1956, the County Court heard the appeal and dismissed it, after ordering that Joseph’s driving privileges be restricted for 60 days. On the following day, January 10, 1956, the County Court reversed its position and sustained the appeal, with the statement that: “The Court is of the opinion that the Secretary of Revenue’s action is arbitrary and that a rehearing should be scheduled for the defendant Kohan.”

The record fails to reveal any arbitrariness on the part of the Secretary of Revenue. On the contrary, he would have been remiss in the fulfillment of his duties if he had not taken the action which was condemned by the lower court. The work of the Bureau of Highway Safety would fall into hopeless and dismal chaos if, before it could act, it would be required to depend on the procrastinations, the vacillations, and equivocations of accused motorists. It would challenge credulity beyond what has been written in the history of human nature, to expect that a motorist, who failed to appear at a hearing for an alleged violation, would ask for a second hearing, knowing that so long as he failed to request the second hearing he would never need to answer charges brought against him and thus would never need to face the risk of losing his driving privilege, either temporarily or permanently.

The Allegheny County Court apparently treated rather lightly, if at all, the serious business of Joseph’s refusal to attend the hearing ordered by the Department. The Court apparently saw nothing amiss in the youthful motorist’s explanation that he stayed away from the hearing because he was “busy.” If such an explanation had been offered by one more mature in *267 years, it would still be juvenile. In the febrile life of today, everyone is busy — for good or ill — but an alleged busy-ness is no excuse for snapping one’s fingers at the laws of the Commonwealth.

The court below effected a considerable economy in the time required to solve the problem of the appeal by simply citing the case of Commonwealth v. Puppo, 63 D. & C. 533 (Northumberland County), and asserting that it was “almost identical in fact history” to the instant case. In the first place, the facts in the Puppo case were quite different from the situation in the case at bar. There, the defendant was physically unable to attend the departmental hearing because Puppo “had met with an accident the day before the date of the hearing and was confined to his home on account of injuries for a period of five days . . .” In the second place, the decision of the Court in Northumberland County in the Puppo case cannot be accepted as good law. After the motorist had recovered from his injuries (which only disabled him five days) he still did not advise the Department why he had absented himself from the hearing. Nor did he ask for a second hearing. The Secretary of Revenue had scheduled Puppo’s hearing for September 15, 1947. He did not suspend Puppo’s license until October 23, 1947. Puppo thus had over a month — from September 19,1947 (when he had recovered from his disability) until October 23, 1947, to request a second hearing. How long must the Secretary of Revenue and the whole scheme of highway safety wait on the pleasure of a motorist to ask for what he has already been accorded, namely an opportunity to tell his story as to why he has come into conflict with the provisions of The Yehicle Code?

The Court of Northumberland County said further in its opinion, which the Allegheny County Court regarded as authority, that: “Where a person who has *268 been duly notified to appear before the secretary fails to make his appearance or attend the hearing, then the secretary must notify such person to appear at a subsequent hearing, for the purpose of determining his failure to appear at the first hearing.” According to this reasoning if a motorist then fails to appear at a second scheduled hearing, the Secretary will be required to fix a third hearing to give the motorist an opportunity to explain why he stayed away at the second hearing, and, with a third nonappearance, there would need to be a fourth hearing, and so on. Such a procedure would make law enforcement subservient to the defiant and the slothful, and would eventually transform regularized procedure into satiric stultification. Moreover, and this is the categoric answer to the Puppo decision, there is no provision in The Vehicle Code requiring the Secretary of Revenue to notify the errant motorist of a second unrequested hearing.

Section 615(b) of The Vehicle Code specifies, inter alia: “(b) The secretary may suspend the operator’s license or learner’s permit of any person, after a hearing before the secretary or his representative, . . . whenever the secretary finds upon sufficient evidence: . . . 7. That any such person involved in an accident by motor vehicle or tractor, or in any violation of this act, has failed to attend or appear at a hearing before the secretary or his representatives after being properly notified.”

The Court of Common Pleas of Northumberland County arrived at a wrong conclusion as it travelled over the highway of logic because it began its journey of rationalization from an incorrect starting point. It assumed that the language of the Act, as above quoted, provides for two hearings for a motorist who ignores the notice of the Secretary of Revenue for a first hearing: Thus that Court said: “. . . the act now in force *269 clearly provides that the secretary may suspend the operator’s license after a hearing before the secretary and his representative and then lists seven situations in which the secretary may exercise such power, the seventh reason being a person’s failure to attend or appear at a hearing.

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Bluebook (online)
122 A.2d 808, 385 Pa. 264, 1956 Pa. LEXIS 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-kohan-pa-1956.